
Text -- Proverbs 27:27 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Pro 27:27
Wesley: Pro 27:27 - -- Or, if thou chusest rather to keep thy goats, the milk will serve thee for food to thyself and family. In ancient times men used a plain and simple di...
Or, if thou chusest rather to keep thy goats, the milk will serve thee for food to thyself and family. In ancient times men used a plain and simple diet.
JFB: Pro 27:25-27 - -- The fact that providential arrangements furnish the means of competence to those who properly use them is another motive to diligence (compare Psa 65:...
The fact that providential arrangements furnish the means of competence to those who properly use them is another motive to diligence (compare Psa 65:9-13).
Clarke -> Pro 27:27
Clarke: Pro 27:27 - -- Goats’ milk enough for thy food - ללחמך lelachmecha , "to thy bread;"for they ate the bread and supped the milk to assist mastication, a...
Goats’ milk enough for thy food -
The reader who wishes to see these maxims detailed and illustrated at large, may consult the writers De Re Rustica, where he will find much curious information.
TSK -> Pro 27:27

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 27:23-27
Barnes: Pro 27:23-27 - -- The verses sing the praises of the earlier patriarchal life, with its flocks and herds, and tillage of the ground, as compared with the commerce of ...
The verses sing the praises of the earlier patriarchal life, with its flocks and herds, and tillage of the ground, as compared with the commerce of a later time, with money as its chief or only wealth.
The state - literally, face. The verse is an illustration of Joh 10:3, Joh 10:14.
Riches - The money which men may steal, or waste, is contrasted with the land of which the owner is not so easily deprived. Nor will the crown (both the "crown of pure gold"worn on the mitre of the high priest, Exo 29:6; Exo 39:30; and the kingly diadem, the symbol of power generally) be transmitted (as flocks and herds had been) "from one generation to another."
Appeareth - Better, When the grass disappeareth, the "tender grass showeth itself."Stress is laid on the regular succession of the products of the earth. The "grass"("hay") of the first clause is (compare Psa 37:2; Psa 90:5; Psa 103:15; 2Ki 19:26) the proverbial type of what is perishable and fleeting. The verse gives a picture of the pleasantness of the farmer’ s calling; compared with this what can wealth or rank offer? With this there mingles (compare Pro 27:23) the thought that each stage of that life in its season requires care and watchfulness.
Poole -> Pro 27:27
Poole: Pro 27:27 - -- Goats’ milk enough for thy food or, if thou choosest rather to keep than to sell thy goats, the milk of them will serve thee for food to thysel...
Goats’ milk enough for thy food or, if thou choosest rather to keep than to sell thy goats, the milk of them will serve thee for food to thyself, and to thy family. In ancient times men used a plain and simple diet, and neither knew nor used that curiosity and luxury in it which after-ages invented.
For thy maidens who are named, because this nourishment was more proper for the weaker sex, whereas men required a stronger diet.
Gill -> Pro 27:27
Gill: Pro 27:27 - -- And thou shalt have goats' milk enough for thy food,.... The word for "goats", in Pro 27:26, signifies he goats, which were sold to buy fields, pay s...
And thou shalt have goats' milk enough for thy food,.... The word for "goats", in Pro 27:26, signifies he goats, which were sold to buy fields, pay servants or rent, or purchase the necessaries of life; and this here signifies she goats, which were kept for their milk; and which was daily used for food in some countries, and is still in use for the same purpose in some parts of our kingdoms; and in medicine it has been preferred by some physicians above others, next to the milk of women w: and the diligent husbandman is promised not only plenty of this his own eating, at least a sufficiency of it, but for his family;
for the food of thy household; his wife and children:
and for maintenance for thy maidens: or "the lives" x of them, on which they should live; for, though menservants might require strong meat yet the maidens might live upon milk; besides, Athenaeus y speaks of most delicious cheese made of goats' milk, called "tromilicus". The design of the whole is to show that a man diligent in his business shall have a sufficiency for himself and his family; and, though it may be but the meaner sort of food and clothing he may get, yet, having food and raiment, he should therewith be content.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 27:1-27
TSK Synopsis: Pro 27:1-27 - --1 Observations of self love;5 of true love;11 of care to avoid offenses;23 and of the household care.
MHCC -> Pro 27:23-27
MHCC: Pro 27:23-27 - --We ought to have some business to do in this world, and not to live in idleness, and not to meddle with what we do not understand. We must be diligent...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 27:23-27
Matthew Henry: Pro 27:23-27 - -- Here is, I. A command given us to be diligent in our callings. It is directed to husbandmen and shepherds, and those that deal in cattle, but it is ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 27:23-27
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 27:23-27 - --
An exhortation to rural industry, and particularly to the careful tending of cattle for breeding, forms the conclusion of the foregoing series of pr...
Constable -> Pro 25:1--29:27; Pro 27:23-27
Constable: Pro 25:1--29:27 - --IV. MAXIMS EXPRESSING WISDOM chs. 25--29
We return now to the proverbs of Solomon (cf. 1:1-22:16). Chapters 25-2...
